<html><body>
<DIV>See below for details of a rally, 8:30am March 2 at the steps of the Supreme Court building, First St. between E. Capitol St. & Maryland Ave., NE in DC.</DIV>
<DIV>The American Ethical Union, the federation of ethical societies in the US, was signatory to the amicus brief mentioned in the article.</DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">-------------- Forwarded Message: -------------- <BR>From: "Roy Speckhardt" <rspeckhardt@americanhumanist.org> <BR>To: "Friends" <roy@americanhumanist.org> <BR>Subject: Rally Around the Supreme Court Ten Commandments Cases <BR>Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2005 14:16:37 +0000 <BR><BR>Rally Around the Supreme Court Ten Commandments Cases <BR><BR>On March 2, 2005 the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on two Ten <BR>Commandment cases, Thomas Van Orden v. Rick Peary, et al. and McCreary <BR>County, Kentucky, et al. v. The American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky, <BR>et al. The two cases challenge the constitutionality of Ten Commandments <BR>display on government property. <BR><BR>Displays of the Ten Commandments on public property blatantly violate the <BR>First Amendment ban on government promotion of religion. It is not the duty <BR>of government to endorse a sectarian point of view. <BR><BR>The American Humanist Association, as well as organizations participating in <BR>the rally, submitted an amicus brief to the Supreme Court. The AHA’s brief <BR>was signed by an array of sixteen religious and secular organizations and <BR>shows the perspective of those who are disenfranchised by <BR>government-endorsed displays of the Ten Commandments. <BR><BR>As defenders of church-state separation, we call upon the Court to affirm <BR>church-state separation. A ruling that lowers the already vulnerable wall <BR>between religion and government would render religious minorities and the <BR>nonreligious to second-class citizenship. <BR><BR>ACTION <BR><BR>We urge you to join the AHA and its coalition partners of freethought and <BR>religious liberty groups in a rally on March 2, 2005 at the steps of the <BR>Supreme Court building at 8:30 AM the day the oral arguments will be heard. <BR><BR>Please plan to attend the rally. Make your own poster or use one of ours. <BR>For more background on the Ten Commandments and these cases see the AHA’s <BR>Ten Commandment Resources page at http://www.americanhumanist.org/10c/ <BR><BR>Our perspective must not be absent from the media firestorm that is bound to <BR>erupt that day. Regardless of which way the Court rules on these landmark <BR>cases, their decisions will have implications that are sure to reverberate <BR>nationwide. <BR><BR>Rally to Support the Separation of Church and State! <BR><BR><BR>--- <BR>We rarely send announcements about DC area activities, but if we've sent <BR>this e-mail to you in error, or you wish not to receive such e-mails, just <BR>reply to this message with the message: "unsubscribe" <BR><BR><BR></BLOCKQUOTE></body></html>